ἄγριον

ágrios

wild

Fundamentally, 'belonging to the country, uncultivated, wild (as of plants or animals)'. In various contexts, refers to: (1) growing or living in the wild (not domesticated or cultivated), such as wild plants or wild animals; (2) exhibiting characteristics perceived as fierce, savage, untamed, violent, or rough; used descriptively both literally (e.g., wild olives) and figuratively (e.g., wild behavior or temperament).

G66

Mark 1:6 · Word #20

Lexicon G66

Lemmaἄγριος
Transliterationágrios
Strong'sG66
DefinitionFundamentally, 'belonging to the country, uncultivated, wild (as of plants or animals)'. In various contexts, refers to: (1) growing or living in the wild (not domesticated or cultivated), such as wild plants or wild animals; (2) exhibiting characteristics perceived as fierce, savage, untamed, violent, or rough; used descriptively both literally (e.g., wild olives) and figuratively (e.g., wild behavior or temperament).

Morphology ADJ.A ACC N SG All morphology codes

Part of Speech ADJ.A — Attributive Adjective — Describes a noun directly
Case ACC — Accusative — Direct object or extent
Gender N — Neuter — Grammatical neuter
Number SG — Singular — One

Common Translation

Phrasewild
Literalwild

Lexical Info

Lemmaἄγριος
Strong'sG66

SIBI-P1 Translation G66-02

wild

Morphological NotesAdjective, neuter singular; nominative or accusative case (Gr,AA,,,,NNS / ANS).
Rendering RationaleThe adjective denotes what belongs to the field or countryside and is therefore uncultivated or untamed. As a neuter singular nominative/accusative form, it describes or substantively denotes a single wild thing without specifying gender.

View full lexicon entry for G66 →

SILEX v2

SIBI-P2 (Context-Aware)

wild

Same as P1Yes
Rationale'wild' is correct for this adjective describing the honey; P1 is appropriate.